Batteries

POSCO to invest in Tanzanian mine to cut Chinese graphite imports

Sang Hoon Sung

6 HOURS AGO

Black Rock Mining Chairman Richard Crookes (front left) and POSCO International President and CEO Lee Kye-in (front right) sign a $40 million equity investment agreement on Sept. 3, 2024, in Perth, Australia (Courtesy of POSCO International)

POSCO Group, South Korea’s steel and battery material conglomerate, is set to invest in the world’s second-largest natural graphite reserve in Tanzania developed by an Australian company to reduce the imports of the mineral from China.

POSCO International Corp., the group’s general trading unit, on Tuesday agreed to buy a 19.9% stake in Black Rock Mining Ltd. for $40 million, which is developing a graphite mine in Mahenge, Tanzania.

The Australian company has an 84% stake in the Mahenge Graphite Project estimated to host some 6 million tons of natural graphite.

POSCO Holdings Inc., the parent of South Korea’s sole anode producer POSCO Future M Co., aims to reduce its dependence on graphite from China used for electric vehicle battery anodes, the negatively charged part, to zero and use only its own. The group has also been trying to secure other battery minerals such as lithium, cobalt and nickel from other countries.

The US plans to stop providing tax incentives on EVs equipped with batteries containing graphite from China in 2027.

“We will continue to discover projects that contribute to improving the global competitiveness of the national key industries such as secondary battery materials,” said POSCO Chairman Chang In-hwa.

“We also plan to use the group’s various business portfolios and global networks to establish supply chains for national security.”

South Korea is home to major global EV battery makers including LG Energy Solution Ltd., SK On Co. and Samsung SDI Co., which heavily rely on raw materials from China. About 90% of graphite consumed in the peninsula is reportedly from the mainland.

TO DOUBLE GRAPHITE PROCUREMENTS

POSCO International is set to secure an additional 30,000 tons of natural graphite a year from the Tanzanian mine through the investment in Black Rock Mining as the South Korean company plans to join the second phase of the project. It has already been participating in the first phase, signing a deal to secure the same volume for 25 years in May 2023.

The company is scheduled to procure the graphite in 2026 when the mine with an annual capacity of 89,000 tons starts operations.

Black Rock Mining plans to increase the capacity to 347,000 tons a year through further developments, which POSCO International aims to join.

The deal allows POSCO International to sell some of graphite from the mine, industry sources said. The mine is set to both high-purity graphite, which is used for battery anodes, and low-purity graphite, which is used for steel, cement and auto parts.

The trading company secured a right to sell the low-purity graphite worldwide, while POSCO Future M uses the high-purity one.

POSCO Future M's anode factory (File photo by POSCO Future M)


TO DIVERSIFY GRAPHITE SOURCES

POSCO Group is diversifying graphite supply sources by participating in mine development projects in African countries such as Mozambique and Madagascar.

The conglomerate is also ramping up production of artificial graphite in South Korea.

Those measures were expected to meet much of POSCO Future M’s estimated needs of 120,000-200,000 tons of graphite a year by 2027, industry sources said.

South Korea also supports domestic battery materials manufacturers. The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy set up a 5 trillion won ($3.7 billion) fund for supply chain stabilization to provide financial support such as loans with low interest rates to battery materials producers such as POSCO Future M.

Write to Sang Hoon Sung at uphoon@hankyung.com
 
Jongwoo Cheon edited this article.

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